Posted 2015-February-02, 14:34
Several things have gone wrong here. It's not just the mis-explanation. "Inverted" is an illegal explanation - the legal explanation, had that been their agreement, would have been to state the point range and shape of the bid. Just barely possible is "we agreed to play inverted minor raises, but we did not discuss what that means". IAC MI was presented during the auction. It is thus required of South that she first call the director and then explain, in the director's presence, that she disagrees with her partner's explanation of the meaning of 2♣. After investigation shows that "inverted" was indeed not their agreement, the TD will require South to give a correct explanation. Then the director will give East the opportunity to withdraw his last pass and substitute another call, explaining to all the UI ramifications and any other ramifications of such a withdrawal. The auction will then proceed from that point.
The requirement to call the director as above is a "must" law (20F5), which means that it should draw a procedural penalty "more often than not". It's not clear how experienced South is, but I see no good reason not to give a PP, save "it's a club, we don't give PPs" which IMO is the wrong approach. If it's clearly something they aren't at all familiar with, as it might be given how many players have no clue about this aspect of law, I'd give a warning, but if they should know better (probably because I gave 'em a warning last week, or two weeks ago) they get a standard PP.
In the circumstances, the director not having been called when he should have been, Law 21B3 comes into play: if the TD judges that the offending side gained an advantage from the irregularity, he awards an adjusted score. That would be done under Law 12, most likely Law 12C1, which deals with assigned adjusted scores.
I would be inclined to adjust, if the criteria are met. I would want to see all four hands first. And yes, I would take into account East's statement about what he would bid. It may be self-serving, but it's still evidence. How much weight I would give it would depend on "table feel" basically.
BTW, if South had complied with Law 20F5 in the first place, the TD wouldn't be in the position of having to judge whether to adjust or whether to accept or how much weight to give to a statement by East. Seems to me that's yet another good reason for a PP.
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
2♣ was alerted by North. West did not enquire about 2♣; at East's last turn he asked and was told "inverted" by North. 2♦ made 4 for a surprisingly good matchpoint score (EW are cold for 3NT). At the end of the hand, EW realized that S's hand does not correspond to an inverted raise (she had 3HCP including Q-empty fifth of clubs). NS are an occasional partnership; S's CC is not marked with inverted raises while N's is so marked. In conversation with the players it was established that N thought this was an inverted raise and S did not. N's explanation of "inverted" thus constitutes MI. E is adamant that if he had known S could be weak he would have bid. Two questions:
Do you adjust?
Do you take E's statement about what bid he would have made into account when considering likely/at all probable outcomes?